BMJ 2002;325:1337 ( 7 December )
Primary care
10-minute consultation
Food allergy
Aziz Sheikh, NHS R&D national primary care training fellow a, Samantha Walker, head of research b. a Department of
General Practice and Primary Health Care, Imperial College of Science,
Technology and Medicine, London W6 8RP, b National Respiratory Training Centre, Warwick CV34 4AB
Correspondence
to: Dr A Sheikh, Department of Public Health Sciences, St George's
Hospital Medical School, London SW17 0RE asheikh{at}sghms.ac.uk
A newly qualified teacher requests investigations for
possible food allergies. She has been troubled with symptoms of
tiredness, nausea, bloating, and intermittent diarrhoea. Bread and
chocolate have been identified as possible triggers, and reducing
intake of these foods has resulted in some improvement of symptoms.
General physical examination is unremarkable.
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What issues you should cover |
- What does she mean by "food allergy"? Patients often use food
allergy as a generic term that encompasses a broad range of symptoms
triggered by certain foods. In contrast, clinicians reserve the term
for immunologically mediated abnormal reactions to foods. Although
about a fifth of the general population believe they have a food
allergy, less than 1% of reactions can be confirmed on double blind,
placebo controlled food challenge.
- Differentiate between IgE mediated allergic reactions and non-allergic
food reactions. The former may require meticulous avoidance of the
foods implicated (often for life) to minimise the risk of potentially
life threatening reactions. The latter, although not life threatening,
may result in dietary deficiencies.
- In IgE mediated food allergy, common triggers include eggs, milk,
peanuts, and fish (including seafood); less common triggers include
fruit, vegetables, and tree nuts. Reactions typically occur within
minutes of ingestion of the offending food(s) and provoke predictable
reactions, which are typically local (angio-oedema, perioral itching,
and laryngeal oedema) and systemic (urticaria, rhinoconjunctivitis,
wheezing, diarrhoea and vomiting, and, in some cases, anaphylaxis).
- In food intolerance, symptoms are typically non-specific and may occur
in response to a range of foods. A temporal relation between food
intake and onset of symptoms is often difficult to establish. Detailed
questioning typically shows that the offending foods are sometimes well tolerated.
- Has she previously been investigated for food allergy? Inquire
about results of food specific skin prick tests and tests for specific
IgE; verify concordance between symptoms and allergy tests. In some
patients, food allergies will have been diagnosed on the basis of
investigations of spurious value
for example, kinesiology.
- Ask about the worst reaction. Is she at risk of food induced anaphylaxis?
- Is her diet nutritionally adequate? In children, assess and monitor
height and weight gain.
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Useful reading
Bindslev-Jensen C. Food allergy. In: Durham SR, ed. ABC of
allergies. London: BMJ Books, 1998:44-7.
Bruinjzeel-Koomen CA, Ortolani C, Aas K, Bindslev-Jensen C, Bjorksten
B, Moneret Vautrin DA, et al. Position paper. Adverse reactions to
foods. Allergy 1995;50:623-36.
Durham SR, Church MK. Principles of allergy diagnosis. In:
Holgate ST, Church MK, Lichtenstein LM, eds. Allergy. 2nd
ed. London: Mosby, 2001:3-16.
Radcliffe MJ. Food allergy and intolerance. In: Jackson WJ, ed.
Allergic disorders. London: Mosby-Wolfe,
1997:91-107.
Sampson HA. Food allergy. In Kay AB, ed. Allergy and allergic
diseases. Oxford: Blackwell Science, 1997:1517-49.
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Self help groups
- British Allergy Foundation (tel 020 7600 6127;
www.allergyfoundation.com)
- Leatherhead Food Intolerance Databank (tel 01372 376761)
- Medic-Alert Foundation (tel 020 7833 3034)
- Anaphylaxis Campaign (tel 020 8554 5579; www.anaphylaxis.org.uk)
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What you should do |
- No allergy tests are necessary in those with a history that
strongly suggests food intolerance. Other differential diagnoses must,
however, be considered and, if suspected, investigated appropriately.
- Reassure patients with a food intolerance that they do not have a food
allergy. Advise them to abstain from the offending foods for a while,
but encourage them to try, from time to time, to reintroduce them into
their diet. In those with weight loss or dietary deficiencies, consider
referral to a dietitian.
- For those in whom IgE mediated food allergy is suspected, or in
those in whom you cannot safely exclude this diagnosis, request serum
specific IgE tests to the foods implicated. Indiscriminate testing to a
range of foods is not recommended as these tests have low specificity.
- IgE mediated food allergy will require avoidance of the provoking
foods. Help from a dietitian with detailed written advice on avoidance
strategies is often useful.
- Refer patients with a history of IgE mediated anaphylaxis to an allergy
specialist. Consider requesting serum specific IgE tests to the foods
implicated while awaiting assessment. Advise the patient to totally
avoid the food trigger(s) identified. In patients with life threatening
symptoms, prescribe self administered adrenaline (epinephrine). Give
patients a written management plan advising exactly when, where, and
how to administer the adrenaline auto-injector.
- Most fatal reactions to food occur in people with asthma. In
those with both asthma and food induced anaphylaxis, ensure that asthma
is optimally controlled.
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Footnotes |
The series is edited by Ann McPherson and Deborah
Waller
The BMJ welcomes contributions from
general practitioners to the series
This is
part of a series of occasional articles on common problems in
primary care
© BMJ 2002